French Open expansion aims to preserve Parisian style
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[May 25, 2017]
By Julien Pretot
PARIS (Reuters) - After years of legal
battles the French Open has begun to expand its facilities, hoping
to match other grand slam events - including having a roof over
Centre Court to banish weather delays - while preserving its
Parisian pizzazz.
Roland Garros lags behind the other three grand slams in terms of
covered courts - the Australian Open has a roof over three courts,
the U.S. Open will have a second roof by 2018 and Wimbledon will add
a second one by 2019.
The French Open has none, which has had an adverse effect on revenue
from television rights since, with a court roof, play is guaranteed
now matter how bad the weather may get.
The expanded Roland Garros - which is the only grand slam event
played on clay - will be delivered in 2019 with the roof over Centre
Court available by 2020, according to Jean-Francois Martins, a
deputy mayor of Paris in charge of sports.
Roland Garros has in recent years been at risk of losing its grand
slam status, Martins told Reuters.
"In 2010 there was some real competition from Madrid. Spain were the
king of clay and they had what it takes to host a grand slam. There
was also competition from the Gulf countries, who were ready to
offer some crazy prize money," he said.
"The only way for us was to be able to get more spectators."

GREENHOUSE COURT
Court One will be replaced with the "Court des Serres" (Greenhouse
Court), flanked by tropical vegetation, and the number of seats
increased from 3,600 to 5,000.
Court One, also known as The Bullring given its round shape, was
built in 1980 and has been the theater of memorable matches.
"I will personally miss Court One and the memories I keep from those
high and low moments spent in that small stadium," said Jim Courier,
twice French Open champion in the early 1990s.
"I never lifted a trophy on that court but it will remain my
favorite tennis court in the world long after it is gone."
French tennis federation president Bernard Giudicelli believes the
Parisian flair of the French Open will be preserved in the expansion
of Roland Garros.
"If we decided to stay in Paris (after other plans were drafted to
move to the outskirts), it is because we wanted to keep this
Parisian identity," he told Reuters.

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View of the Philippe Chartrier court as spectators protect
themselves from the rain with umbrella before the start of the
women's quarter-final match between Sara Errani of Italy and Andrea
Petkovic of Germany during the French Open tennis tournament at the
Roland Garros stadium in Paris, France, June 4, 2014.
REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier/File Photo

"Roland Garros is Paris, it's France, its
savoir-faire, it's elegance and glam. And the Court des Serres will
show just that. It will be a vegetal architecture, completely
unique."
Martins added: "The French Open will remain unique because it's
almost in central Paris - contrary to Wimbledon or the U.S. Open for
example. What will change is that spectators will have a better
experience walking around the courts... The venue (up to now) has
been too small."
TRADITIONAL CHARMS
One of the traditional charms of Roland Garros has been the suspense
created by the need to halt unfinished matches at dusk due to the
lack of a roof, requiring them to resume the next day.
"I agree it was nice to have those (Gael) Monfils v (Fabio) Fognini
matches interrupted at 9:43 p.m., for instance, but people who paid
to see a match really want to see the end of it," said Martins.
"We have to make sure the matches are seen by as many spectators and
TV viewers as possible."
The Roland Garros extension was planned in 2011 but has only just
begun after a spate of court cases filed by residents' associations
against the move were definitively quashed by French tribunals late
last year.
Area residents had argued that the extension would encroach on the
nearby Auteuil botanical greenhouse complex.

"We have to admit the (residents') opposition has forced us to make
the project better. The Court des Serres would not be that great if
it weren't for this opposition," said Martins.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Mark Heinrich) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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